Glenbrook North High School
Glenbrook North High School is a public high school in Northbrook, Illinois, United States. It was established in 1953 and is part of the Northfield Township High School District 225.
In 2018, it was ranked the 48th-best public high school in the United States by Niche.
History
Glenbrook North High School opened its doors in the fall of 1953 as Glenbrook High School, and was renamed Glenbrook North in 1962 after the opening of Glenbrook South High School.Glenbrook North has grown fourfold in the size of its student body since its founding. In 1979, the school opened the Sheely Center for the Performing Arts, and in 1990, a fieldhouse was dedicated. In the spring of 1996, a three-year renovation and construction project involving the science facilities and the “A” wing was built. A second swimming pool was built in 2000 to accommodate the burgeoning growth in aquatics. A successful referendum in 2006 enabled the creation of the two-story classroom “F” wing, state of the art Fitness Center, complete renovation and additions to the Music Area, and a sun-filled main entrance, which were completed in 2009.
Throughout the years, Glenbrook North High School has received state and national recognition for its academic excellence. In the late 1950s, when Glenbrook was less than 10 years old, it was named one of the top 44 high schools in the country by a survey in a national magazine. In 1984, GBN was named one of only four high schools in the state of Illinois to receive the United States Office of Education Excellence in Education Award from President Ronald Reagan. In 2008, GBN was selected again for the nation's top distinction as a Blue Ribbon School.
John Hughes films
was an alumnus who used the school in his films. The two best-known movies filmed at this high school were The Breakfast Club and Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Hughes' 1985 film The Breakfast Club featured a group of kids from "Shermer, Illinois 60062." Shermerville was the original name of the town of Northbrook, where GBN is located, and 60062 is the town's zip code. The movie features the clash between what was known during the 1980s as the 'sporto' versus 'freak' cultures at GBN. Some interior scenes of The Breakfast Club were filmed inside Glenbrook North, and exterior shots of GBN were used in both The Breakfast Club and Ferris Bueller's Day Off.President Clinton visit
On January 22, 1997, President Bill Clinton visited the school to deliver a speech about education initiatives. It was held in the school's fieldhouse and largely centered around mathematics and science. At the time, students in Northern Illinois were participating in a program called "First in the World." The program was to judge the level of knowledge in math and science against other schools around the world. Northern Illinois students scored 1st in the Science category and 3rd in the Mathematics category. Remarking about Glenbrook High School District 225, President Clinton said:Can you imagine a school district or a set of school districts with more genuine local control than this one, with—more than these— more parental involvement, more committed teachers, more—you know, you've got local control. But you didn't use it as an excuse not to throw your hat in the ring. I think it's great that it came out this way. But if you had finished eighth and ninth, I would still be here to pat you on the back because you had the guts to do it.
Less than a month later, Bill Clinton referenced his visit to the school and these achievements in his 1997 State of the Union on February 4, 1997.
Student hazing incident
In May 2003, the school gained notoriety after an off-campus, non-school-sanctioned event involving students dressed in school colors turned into a major hazing incident that attracted national media attention. The event was a "Powder Puff" girls' football game between members of the junior and senior classes. The "game" took place on May 4, 2003, in Chipilly Woods, part of the Cook County Forest Preserve District. Although the annual Powder Puff game had been held at the school's football stadium in earlier decades, there was no football at the 2003 event. During the event, about 20 junior class participants were covered in paint, urine, feces, and animal guts. Some were shot with paintball guns, others were kicked and beaten. At least five participants sustained injuries requiring medical attention.Thirty-one students – twenty-eight females and three males – were suspended from school for 10 days. They were later expelled. Some of the expelled students and their parents filed a lawsuit to allow the expelled students to graduate. The plaintiffs and the school district reached an agreement where the expelled students would have their diplomas mailed to them but would not be able to participate in graduation ceremonies. Local law enforcement authorities investigated the hazing incident and filed charges against 15 students for assault and battery. Two mothers were charged with providing alcohol for the event. All were convicted and the sentences received were light, ranging from probation to community service.
A community-wide task force was established by the Northbrook Police Department Community Services Division after the hazing incident. Their final report stressed the needs for recognizing and preventing hazing incidents.
Academics
The academic school year consists of 37 weeks divided into two semesters. It has a block schedule with classes meeting on alternating days and each school day consists of four blocks of 90 minutes each. The summer school program at Glenbrook North is six weeks in length.In 2017, the school graduated 98.4% of its senior class, which had an average composite ACT score of 27.1, and 89.5% enrolled in college. The 2017 class included 21 National Merit Semifinalists. The student-to-teacher ratio is 11.54 to 1.
In 2018, it was ranked the 48th best public high school in the United States by Niche. In 2016, it was ranked 23rd on the public high schools with the best teachers in America by Business Insider.
Glenbrook Academy of International Studies
Glenbrook Academy of International Studies is a four-year program with students from Glenbrook North and Glenbrook South High Schools. Thirty freshmen are accepted into the Academy each year, with no opportunity of joining after that. Founded in 1981 to give gifted students a more unorthodox learning alternative, it integrates the teaching and learning of English, Social Studies, and World Languages. Each class learns one of a selection of four different foreign languages: Spanish, French, German, or Mandarin Chinese.Activities
The school offers more than 75 extracurricular activities, including clubs, honorary societies, music organizations, sports related activities, student publications, trips, and performances.Debate
The school's debate team was ranked the top debate school of the 20th century based on performance in the National Speech and Debate Association. The school has won numerous state and national championships in Policy Debate, as well as state championships in Lincoln-Douglas and Public Forum Debate. It is the only high school debate program in the country to have ever won the debate's "Triple Crown," sweeping the National Speech and Debate Association Tournament, the Tournament of Champions, and the Grand National Speech and Debate Tournament in 2004.Since 1974, it has won at least one national championship in debate in fourteen individual years. It has also won an Illinois High School Association state championship in 18 of the 35 years since 1982, and has placed as runner up in three of those years.
Philanthropy
Its students organize an annual food drive, collecting canned goods to benefit the Northfield Township Food Pantry. In 2009, the school joined with Glenbrook South High School to organize Foodstock, a benefit concert featuring Fall Out Boy lead singer Patrick Stump. Students from both schools came together to break the Guinness World Record for the largest can stack, building a structure where 59,084 cans were stacked in the shape of two hands holding a can.Athletics
The school is a member of the Central Suburban League and the Illinois High School Association. William Lutz Stadium, which is the home of the Glenbrook North's football, lacrosse, track & field and soccer teams, is named in honor of William Lutz, the school's first athletic director.The school sponsors interscholastic teams for boys and girls in basketball, cross country, golf, gymnastics, soccer, swimming & diving, lacrosse, tennis, track & field, volleyball, and water polo. Boys may also compete in baseball, football, and wrestling. Girls may compete in badminton, cheerleading, and softball.
In 2005, the school became the first large-enrollment high school in Illinois to have won a state championship in each of football, basketball and baseball. The following GBN teams have won IHSA sponsored state championship tournaments in the listed years:
- Baseball: 1966, 1974
- Basketball : 2005
- Football: 1974
- Hockey: 1984, 1985, 2007, 2008, 2015
- Soccer : 1983
- Swimming & Diving : 1978
- Tennis : 1981, 1999, 2006
- Volleyball : 1993
Basketball
Hockey
Glenbrook North Hockey, a club team, won back-to-back state titles in 1984 and 1985, becoming the first varsity hockey team in Illinois to do so, and repeating the feat in 2007 and 2008. In 2011, 2013, and 2014, the team returned to the title game but lost to the New Trier Trevians. In 2015, it defeated Benet Academy in the state title game in overtime, 3–2. The Spartans hockey program has won five Illinois state championships.Golf
In 2013, a Glenbrook senior won the Class 3A boys golf individual state championship.Tennis
The Glenbrook North boys tennis program has won three state titles. Glenbrook North's boys tennis program is one of two in IHSA history to win three state titles with three different coaches.In 2004, Glenbrook won the Girls State Doubles Championship.
Notable alumni
- Scott Adsit, comedian, actor and writer
- Benjamin Agosto, attended freshman and sophomore years, ice dancer
- Steven D. Binder, screenwriter, film and television producer
- Jayne Brook, actress
- Mike Brown, NHL hockey player
- Chris Collins, basketball player and coach
- Dave Cruikshank, speed skater
- John Cynn, professional poker player
- William A. Edelstein, physicist
- Kiana Eide, group rhythmic gymnast, part of the American team in the women's rhythmic group all-around event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
- Andrew Gabel, speed skater
- Frank Galati, director, writer and actor
- Ken Goldstein, musician, film and television writer, producer, director and occasional actor
- Anne Henning, speed skater
- John Hughes, filmmaker
- Alisa Kano, group rhythmic gymnast, part of the American team in the women's rhythmic group all-around event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
- Zach Kaplan, entrepreneur
- Jason Kipnis, MLB player
- Ken Kurson, political consultant, journalist, and author
- Robert Kurson, author
- Al Lewis, columnist
- Natalie McGiffert, group rhythmic gymnast, part of the American team in the women's rhythmic group all-around event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
- Scott McGrew, news anchor at NBC Universal
- Pat Misch, MLB player
- Beth Moses, commercial astronaut and the first woman to fly into space on a commercial launch vehicle
- Don Ohlmeyer, television producer
- John Park, singer
- Leah Poulos-Mueller, speed skater
- Doug Rader, MLB player
- Ryan Gary Raddon, DJ, record producer and remixer
- Jenny Rokhman, group rhythmic gymnast, alternate for the American team in the women's rhythmic group all-around event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
- Monica Rokhman, group rhythmic gymnast, part of the American team in the women's rhythmic group all-around event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.
- Yuri Sardarov, actor and producer
- Scott Sanderson, MLB player
- Jon Scheyer, 2006, American-Israeli McDonald's All American, All-American basketball player for national champion 2009–10 Duke basketball team
- Ballard F. Smith, former president of the San Diego Padres
- Michael T. Weiss, actor
- Jahan Yousaf, co-founder of Krewella
- Yasmine Yousaf, co-founder of Krewella
Notable faculty
- Brian James was the varsity boys basketball head coach. He is currently an assistant coach for the Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball.
- Vladimir Pyshnenko was the head senior coach for the district-operated Glenbrook Aquatics program. He won a gold medal and two silver medals in swimming at the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics.